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The Amulet: Journey to Sirok
The Amulet: Journey to Sirok
The Amulet: Journey to Sirok
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The Amulet: Journey to Sirok

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HANDS SWEATING AND HEART RACING...

...only a three-headed dragon stands in his way. Elias' only chance to find his answer is through the serpent. Mystery, marvel, and magic take Elias on a journey of self-discovery. A boy on the verge of adulthood, Elias is forced to make a difficult decision, but he must go on a journey to find his answ

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 16, 2022
ISBN9781639843602
The Amulet: Journey to Sirok

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    Book preview

    The Amulet - E. G. Kardos

    NEW_Amulet_Cover.png

    The Elias Chronicles ~ BOOK I

    Praise for The Amulet: Journey to Sirok

    ... Swords, shape-shifters, and sorcerers all confront Elias as he seeks an answer to the most compelling question of all: who am I? 

    Dr. Leila Christenbury, Past President of the National Council of Teachers of English, former co-editor of the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents Review.

    ...engaging, with a story that keeps you reading...full of creative and enthralling symbolism... I found myself getting lost in it... I did fall in love with the story. 

    This Kid Reviews Books

    E.G. Kardos is a soul searcher. He writes from the head and heart, finding true meaning in the vagaries of life. 

    Dean King, bestselling author of Skeletons on the Zahara

    ... fantasy-lovers of sword and sorcery will not be disappointed-but it is at its heart a very human story. 

    C.S. Marks, author of the Elfhunter Trilogy

    Elias’s quest is our quest, his journey our journey.  

    Roy Dimond, author of I, Bully

    ... a journey in which Elias meets many and varied characters. His own story is linked to the tales of Nattymama that weave into his own adventures. Quick, short prose with a likable main character will make the reading journey pleasurable...  

    David Ward, author of The Grassland Trilogy

    "As a huge fan of The Alchemist and mysticism, I found The Amulet to be just the antidote for my longing to experience another mystical journey..." 

    Dr. Richard Cowling, Editor, Journal of Holistic Nursing

    In the spirit of C.S. Lewis, the fantasy is never about the fantastical; it’s about deeply human and moral concerns: identity, voice, virtue, family, and conflict. A joyous, satisfying, life-affirming read! 

    Dr. William R. Muth, Editorial Advisory Board: Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy

    Books by E. G. Kardos

    ZEN MASTER NEXT DOOR:

    Parables for Enlightened Everyday Living

    THE ELIAS CHRONICLES

    The Amulet: Journey to Sirok~ Book I

    The Rings: Journey Beneath Sirok~ Book II

    The Elixir: Journey On~ Book III – coming soon

    CUTTING OF HARP STRINGS: a novel

    The Elias Chronicles ~ BOOK I

    E.G. Kardos

    First Edition 2022

    PEN IT PUBLICATIONS

    The Amulet: Journey to Sirok by E.G. Kardos

    Copyright © 2022. All rights reserved.

    ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: No part of this book may be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, without the express and prior permission in writing of Pen It Publications. This book may not be circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is currently published.

    This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights are reserved. Pen It Publications does not grant you rights to resell or distribute this book without prior written consent of both Pen It Publications and the copyright owner of this book. This book must not be copied, transferred, sold or distributed in any way.

    Disclaimer: Neither Pen It Publications, or our authors will be responsible for repercussions to anyone who utilizes the subject of this book for illegal, immoral or unethical use.

    This is a work of fiction. The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect that of the publisher.

    This book or part thereof may not be reproduced in any form, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means-electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise-without prior written consent of the publisher, except as provided by United States of America copyright law.

    Published by Pen It Publications in the U.S.A.

    713-526-3989

    www.penitpublications.com

    ISBN: 978-1-63984-360-2

    Edited by Mary A. Kardos & Dina Husseini

    Cover by Donna Cook

    For Zach, Stephanie

    Mary and Elizabeth,

    May your heart forever be your guide.

    "A hero ventures forth from the world

    of common day into a region of

    supernatural wonder. Fabulous forces

    are there encountered and a decisive

    victory is won."

    Joseph Campbell

    Acknowledgements

    Writing is a solitary journey. Getting from the first step to the last, however, takes many champions along the way. Many helped me up on my feet when I stumbled, some showed me the best turn in the road when I searched aimlessly at times, and some encouraged me to keep going even when the path I took seemed to lead to a dead-end.

    My good friend and author, Roy Dimond, helped me with many aspects of my journey, and I owe him a great debt of gratitude. Bestselling author Dean King has always made time to help me ever since the day I met him twenty years ago. My thanks go to Dr. Leila Christenbury for being an early reader and giving me a thumbs up. Thank you to C.S. Marks, author, who freely pointed me in the right direction and shared her many experiences with me.

    Thank you, Mom and Dad. Without them, this tale would never have been told.

    My children, Zach, Stephanie, Mary and Elizabeth are the reason I write. They inspire me with their endless imagination and zest for life. They may not know it, but they are with me every day—and yes, Dad has an imagination.

    Last, I want to acknowledge Kristin, as we’ve been married more than thirty-five years. Thank you for your enduring love and friendship.

    Prologue

    Legend of Sirok

    When the serpent is slithering inside, you will know it, but only with the gift you will understand how it lives and how it dies."

    That’s where she always began.

    Like many women before her, Nattymama passed the legend down to all who would listen. There were those, of course, who would hear but would not heed her words. Good fortune, however, came to most who listened.

    On the spring equinox at the precise time that winter turned to spring, Nattymama dusted off a tattered, yellowed scroll and read aloud to the children in the center of the village. Her account began where the castle now lay in ruins just to the north of the village on a small rocky mountain.

    She told her tale as if it happened only yesterday—or for that matter, she told it as if it might just happen again.

    Her story was known to many as The Legend of Sirok.

    As a young boy, Elias sat front and center and listened to Nattymama, his grandmother, who brought to life the events that she traced back a thousand years. He hung on to her every word and getting through the scary passages took all the courage he could muster. Keeping one eye closed during some scenes, he patiently waited for his favorite parts. He couldn’t get enough of the battle that played out in his head or the amazing way the story ended. For many years to come, he would hear her voice in his head telling the story just as if he was listening to her for the first time. Oftentimes he thought of what the legend truly meant. He had all but committed the ending to memory.

    "…centuries ago, a lightning bolt hurtled upward from the center of the Castle of Sirok. The beam split the clear sky. It was then that the thunder rumbled like a stampede of a thousand water buffalos as bloated clouds, the color of dried ox blood, gobbled up the open sky. All was dark—motionless. One moment passed and then another, but on the third tick of a clock, sheets of rain began to pelt the kingdom. This storm was like no other as something mystical must have been in each and every drop.

    "Hours passed and the rain subsided. Within moments it was certain that the downpour had washed away what contaminated the gilded kingdom. Not long after the rainstorm, curls of black smoke billowed from somewhere near the core of Sirok where huge flames casted an eerie glow on the naked kingdom.

    "Still masked by smoke, the sun eventually shone through misshapen holes in the black blanket of clouds above. With little warning, what was left of the suffocating smoke all but vanished allowing more threads of light to reveal the stone structures high on the mountaintop. Without so much as a smoldering ember, Sirok was reborn. Unlike its old, garish facade, it now stood in simplicity and beauty.

    "A bird sang followed by another. The water was clean, and the air was fresh. The buildings were bright, and the roads led freely in and out. The people saw each other in a new way. The people smiled.

    "Filled with joy, the warrior mounted a horse and rode down the rocky path that few dared to travel. At the foot of the mountain, a hundred or so villagers looked on with blank stares. They said little as they witnessed such chaos that only minutes earlier turned the kingdom into something new—something altogether different from what had stood before.

    "Galloping down the rocky path, the villagers focused on the mysterious young man. The only sounds one could hear were the pounding of the hooves drubbing on the rocky soil. Thump, thump, thump! The warrior, who they discovered was a mere boy, raced up to where the villagers gathered. He yanked on the reins much to the displeasure of his faithful steed and spoke to the crowd.

    What the evil one seized, the people of the kingdom have reclaimed. With this newfound will, we are now free and have washed our hands of our needless guilt. We have nothing to fear as we now know who we are.’

    Nattymama continued, "The villagers standing before the warrior were a field of statues who said nothing, much to the young warrior’s surprise. He spoke again.

    "‘Don’t you see? Our misguided ways in Sirok had become a way of life. We believed in the wrong things. We lived behind a veil, but it is a new day for us—and you— as we are the victors.’

    "‘So where is he? The evil one?’ a man shouted from the crowd.

    "‘He is victim of his own undoing and sealed his fate in the eternal fire of his own making,’ said the warrior. ‘Our resolve is golden. We are the victors,’ said the boy warrior.

    "‘An old woman shouted. ‘But what on earth will become of those poor souls who lived in the Kingdom of Sirok?’

    ‘"Oh, dear woman, you do not understand me. They are free. Free! Their very spirit will make them whole. Sirok will never be the same again; all those who come to know Sirok, to really know it, will be forever changed. Sirok is at our very core.’

    "The warrior looked down to his finger that bore a ring that sparkled in the morning light. He thought of the boy who gave up one treasure for another and he lifted his chin with confidence and raised his open palm to the crowd.

    He gazed out to the souls who stood in silence and abruptly tugged on the reins. The stallion reared back on its hind legs and then galloped at top speed up the rocky mountain.

    1

    Elias

    Like a breeze sifts through the morning mist, his brush strokes barely touched the canvas. The bristles of his well-worn brush were thin as many had been lost on previous paintings. This made no difference as his paintbrush was an extension of his fingers. With his right hand, he dabbed a speck of magenta and with his left, reddish-brown.

    With a wisp of a stroke his imagination erupted as he envisioned a coiled snake on the other side of a fallen tree. Not far away from the rotting trunk, he created another tale of gypsies who plodded down the narrow trails below the hill. He was bringing meaning to a deep forest as it was taking shape on the scuffed-up canvas. His images were fresh as he blended what he saw in front of him with what he could see in his mind’s eye. It all lived in that moment and began a life of its own on the flat surface.

    Elias tilted his head from side to side and inhaled the pure mountain air as he measured his progress. Looking away at the rolling Mátra Mountain range, he could smell and taste a mix of deciduous beech and birch trees that sat on a draft coming from the east. One day I’ll catch this scent in a painting…yeah, I need to figure that out, he thought.

    When he had arrived a few hours earlier, the sky was a deep blue with only the faintest veil of clouds on the horizon that played with the smooth and rolling mountain crests. The heavens were now a smear of amber as the spectrum of colors gradually cloaked the sky. This moment was altogether different as he noticed the new colors sharpen above.

    Perched high upon a cliff, he was alone as he swapped a blank canvas for what was becoming a kaleidoscope of the Hungarian landscape. This was his haven. He entwined himself with the beauty and love of nature. This was nothing new. From a young age, Elias knew what stirred his heart.

    He made his own canvases by stretching remnants of an abandoned gypsy tent over a frame he made from a discarded wooden crate. Nattymama, who was an herbalist, mixed and blended his paints using her own recipe. His brushes were horsehair affixed to slender but sturdy sprigs from a nearby cypress tree. Elias used old forgotten wooden dowels and hinges he found and made them into a sturdy easel. This was all he needed.

    Elias’ long brown hair grazed his shoulders. His light brown eyes were striking and ominous to some but opened a gateway to a peace from deep within him. Lean and average height, he could be pensive and appear brooding at times. Although he was private and a little shy, Elias seldom kept his thoughts to himself if others pushed, teased, or tested him in any manner. Like his paintings, he was an original. He was an old soul who was true to his feelings. He, became frustrated from time to time because others didn’t take their time to even try to understand him.

    Pausing for a moment, he surveyed the vast and beautiful terrain, and he wondered what he could find if he went deep inside the forest well beyond the trees and rocks that were in plain view. He loved what he painted and allowed his imagination to fill in the blanks, but he wanted to know and experience more.

    The forest looked dark, dense, and cold, but that was just an assumption or a guess—he wanted to know for sure. He had never traveled the paths within. Papa cautioned him about the dangers, telling him he could enter at his own risk, but it would be far better to leave the forest alone as there was much to do right around home.

    At ease with his own thoughts and feelings, Elias was happy and fulfilled, but he had a darker side too. An inner voice gnawed at him, reminding him that he was different from the others in his family and those in and around the village. What he felt, he shared with only a few, so he expressed himself in his artwork. As he pieced together in his mind who he thought he was and wanted to be, it was clear what caused the special beat in his heart and what created personal joy deep within him.

    ♦ ♦ ♦

    Elias’s home and family farm were close to where he liked to paint. They lived

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